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 | MANAGING FINANCIAL INFORMATION IN THE TRADE LIFECYCLE
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A Concise Atlas of Financial Instruments and Processes
To order this title, and for more information, click here
By
Martijn Groot, Product Marketing Director, overseeing product direction for financial data management product lines, Asset Control, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Included in series
The Elsevier and Mondo Visione World Capital Markets,
Contents
1. The changing financial services landscape
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Historical perspective and current industry landscape
1.3 The instrument
lifecycle
1.4 The transaction lifecycle
1.5 The information supply chain
1.6 Flow and bespoke business models
1.7 The typical information
architecture
1.8 Consequences and costs
1.9 Conclusion
2. The instrument lifecycle: the life and times of financial instruments.
2.1
Introduction
2.2 Enter the protagonist: the financial instrument
2.3 Types of financial products
2.4 Financial markets
2.5 A birth of
a financial instrument – the process
2.6 Describing a financial instrument
2.7 Active life of financial instruments – corporate actions
2.8 Dependencies between instruments
2.9 Ups and downs throughout an instrument's life.
2.10 The demise of a financial instrument
2.11
Conclusions
3. The information supply chain: overview of the financial content market
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Overview of the content
market and its changing dynamics
3.3 Who are the data sellers?
3.4 The Information Supply Chain
3.5 Different types of content
3.6 Licensing
and contract management.
3.7 Sourcing and dissemination information internally: technical perspective
3.8 Conclusions
4 Information
needs in the transaction lifecycle
4.1 Introduction
4.2 The information manufacturing business: basic versus derived data
4.3 The transaction
Lifecycle
4.4 Processes under scrutiny: regulation and audit
4.5 Use cases
4.6 Conclusions
5. Tying it together: metrics and criteria
for success in infrastructure
5.1 Introduction
5.2 The information entropy situation
5.3 Aspects of information quality
5.3 The content
manufacturing process
5.4 The wholesale versus the retail transaction model
5.5 Quality metrics: information management KPIs and their
SLA context
5.6 Wholesale versus retail: what constitutes success in process and content management?
5.7 Conclusion
6. Conclusion
| Bibliographic details |
Hardbound, 288 pages, publication date: MAY-2008
ISBN-13: 978-0-12-374289-6
Imprint: ACADEMIC PRESS
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| Price and Ordering |
Price:
USD 69.95 EUR 49.95 GBP 41.99
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Last update: 25 Nov 2009
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